........ or
inflict injury on those who had supplanted them. The most active were known as Tories.
They
made no attempt to hide their contempt for the British and their agents. They were ruthlessly hunted down by them and
many endured gruesome fates. John
Johnson was a local landlord, the chief constable and a fearsome and ruthless
tory hunter.
As
chief constable of The Fews, he was charged with upholding and enforcing the
new English law. He often acted as if he
was the law.
He
lived at Roxboro, near Dorsey, South Armagh. Near here even today is a stone that became
known as the “Headin’ Stone” because of his practice of beheading his victims
there. The heads would then be displayed
to deter others.
Along
the Dorsey River is a hole known as the Tory Hole
where Johnson is said to have dumped the decapitated bodies.
Johnson
was handsomely rewarded by his superiors in England. Every Tory he captured and beheaded earned
him a sizable sum of money. His career
spanned many years and by 1739 he was Barrack Master of The Fews and a member
of the Louth Grand Jury.
So
feared was Johnson that to this very day, local people recite the couplet ..
“Jesus
of Nazareth,
King of the Jews
Save
us from Johnson, King of The Fews”.
Johnson’s
family consisted of four sons and two daughters. His son Richard was illegitimate. His mother was his Catholic housekeeper,
Catharine Darby. He died in 1759 and he
too is buried in Creggan Churchyard -
under the same sod as of so many of his victims.